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October Features
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BY MELINDA MAHAFFEY
OPTION A, YOU ARE A:River Rider Canoe Tampa! The 54-mile Hillsborough River offers a preserved old Florida habitat just 12 miles northeast of downtown. It’s a good thing you’ve come in October, too: This month, birds like egrets, ibis, and herons start flocking back to the area, and you might see up to 2,000 over a couple of hours. A leisurely half-day canoe trip will help you discover the many inhabitants of these wetlands. Start your trip at Canoe Escape (canoeescape.com), a family-run shop in Thonotosassa. While most visitors rent a canoe for a self-guided paddle, newcomers should opt for the three-hour interpretive guided trip on Wednesday mornings. As you slowly paddle through the tannin-filled waters, you’ll learn about the 16,000-acre Lower Hillsborough Wilderness Park. Keep an eye out for anhinga, big black-and-gray birds that sunbathe on exposed tree branches to dry their feathers. Watch the grassy banks for deer and wild hogs that come to the river’s edge for a drink. Observe the red-bellied turtles and peninsula cooters huddled together on the logs that jut into the river. As you paddle past cypress trees hung with Spanish moss, you’ll find alligators resting on logs and banks or swimming across the river right in front of you, with just their black eyes showing above the brown water. And just like the local celebrities they are, the gators probably won’t give you the time of day. Our advice? Be like the paparazzi and snap away.
OPTION B, YOU ARE A:Cuban Compañero Cigars saved Tampa. By the late 19th century, the town was in danger of vanishing. But in 1886, Spaniard Don Vicente Martinez Ybor brought his cigar factory to the area, and within five years Tampa had grown 200 percent, to more than 15,000 people. Although the industry has since moved on, you can still stroll the up-and-coming neighborhood to glimpse Ybor City’s hard-working heritage. Start your trip back in time at the Ybor City Museum (ybormuseum.org). There, you’ll learn how Martinez Ybor’s planned community lured Sicilian, German, and Cuban immigrants away from the industrial slums of the Northeast. Midday, stroll the quiet redbrick streets, past historic buildings framed by New Orleans-esque balconies—fitting considering that Ybor’s weekend scene bears a striking resemblance to Mardi Gras. Lunch takes you to the Columbia restaurant (columbiarestaurant.com). Opened in 1905, today the Spanish and Cuban restaurant takes up the entire block. Opt for the sangria; the tuxedoed waiters make it right at the table. As night falls, head to the Centro Asturiano for swing dancing on Thursdays and get a peek into one of Ybor’s remaining social clubs (centroasturianotampa.org). Although you can no longer deposit wages or bowl here, you can still dance in the third-floor grand ballroom, as newcomers to Ybor and residents alike have done for more than a century.
OPTION C, YOU ARE A:Chief Tech Officier Silicon Valley, Seattle…Tampa? Yes indeed, Mr. Jobs. At the Museum of Science and Industry—the largest science center in the South—you can experience the basic building blocks of modern technology. Like touching a little lightning. The fun starts on the second floor at Disasterville, where you’ll explore Mother Nature’s version of technology: phenomena like hurricanes, lightning, and hail. Build a block house using braces and see if it can withstand an earthquake’s shaking as a tornado forms in water in a glass case nearby. Then slip your hand into a chain-mail glove to touch the lightning created in a Tesla coil. Next, head upstairs to the new, couldn’t-get-more-hands-on exhibit, Amazing You. Try an Operation-like game where you carefully remove the patient’s vital organs and put on vision-impairing goggles that mimic the effects of alcohol and try to walk down a yellow line. After you right yourself, take a look through the glass into the IMAX projector room and watch as the supersized film winds its way through the two-ton machine. End your visit, if you dare, at the high-wire bicycle. Strap yourself in and pedal down and back along a 98-foot-long wire suspended across the museum. Don’t worry: Bravery (and physics) will keep you going. mosi.org
OPTION D, YOU ARE A:Beach Comber While the crowds flock to St. Petersburg’s 35 miles of beaches, savvy locals head for the solitary spot that doesn’t sound like a beach, but is: Fort de Soto Park. At the tip of the city’s peninsula, you’ll find a three-mile haven of white sand spread across five barrier islands. Not only has it earned our vote, but TripAdvisor’s community picked its North Beach this year as the nation’s best beach. Sunseekers spend the day lounging under umbrellas on the wide expanse of sand on North Beach. When the tide comes in, stroll along the shore, about ankle-deep. Keep your eyes peeled and you’ll likely find souvenir seashells like conch and sand dollars. But Fort de Soto offers more than a day lounging in the sand. Check out the park’s namesake fort that the Army began building in 1898. Although the military decommissioned it within 25 years, today you can walk around the hulking Battery Laidley, on the National Register of Historic Places. Admire the only remaining 12-inch M1890-M1 mortars in America. Learn how the soldiers lived by taking a free look inside the Quartermaster Storehouse Museum, reconstructed in 2000. Finally, explore the various nature trails, starting with the half-mile Barrier Free Trail behind the park’s headquarters. About halfway down the self-guided flat path, you’ll come upon the gently lapping waves of the water where you might spot wildlife like white ibis and osprey, but likely nothing—or rather, no one—else. pinellascounty.org
Lay of the Land GET THERE Fly In Tampa International Airport (tampaairport.com) lies about five miles northwest of downtown Tampa. Get Around You can easily explore downtown Tampa and Ybor City on foot. To go between them, hop on one of the bright yellow streetcars (tecolinestreetcar.org) for $2. In St. Petersburg, opt for the light blue Looper trolleys (loopertrolley.com) for 25 cents to reach major sites like the Florida Holocaust Museum and the Pier. Get Away Rent a car at the airport to explore the Museum of Science and Industry, the Hillsborough River, and Fort de Soto Park. DO THERE Oct.16–19 Listen to jazz accompanied by the sound of crashing waves as the Clearwater Jazz Holiday in Coachman Park takes to the stage with artists like saxophonist David Sanborn and organist Joey DeFrancesco. clearwaterjazz.com Nov. 14–16 Prep for Thanksgiving’s marathon eating with three days of finger-licking barbecue from around the country (and Australia, too) at St. Petersburg’s annual Ribfest, benefiting local charities. ribfest.org Nov. 15 Smoke stogies with thousands of fellow aficionados or learn roll your own at the 10th annual Cigar Heritage Festival in Ybor City’s Centennial Park. cigarheritagefestival.com
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